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Northwestern Confederacy

The Northwestern Confederacy, or Northwestern Indian Confederacy, was a loose confederacy of Native Americans in the Great Lakes region of the United States created after the American Revolutionary War. Formally, the confederacy referred to itself as the United Indian Nations, at their Confederate Council.[1] It was known infrequently as the Miami Confederacy since many contemporaneous federal officials overestimated the influence and numerical strength of the Miami tribes based on the size of their principal city, Kekionga.

For the confederacy led by Tecumseh, see Tecumseh's confederacy.

Northwestern Confederacy

United Indian Nations

1783–1795

The confederacy, which had its roots in pan-tribal movements dating to the 1740s, formed in an attempt to resist the expansion of the United States and the encroachment of American settlers into the Northwest Territory after Great Britain ceded the region to the U.S. in the 1783 Treaty of Paris. American expansion resulted in the Northwest Indian War (1785–1795), in which the Confederacy won significant victories over the United States, but concluded with a U.S. victory at the Battle of Fallen Timbers. The Confederacy became fractured and agreed to peace with the United States, but the pan-tribal resistance was later rekindled by Tenskwatawa (known as the Prophet) and his brother, Tecumseh, resulting in the formation of Tecumseh's confederacy.

The , the confederacy's honorary sponsors, hosted the first gathering of native nations at their villages on the upper Sandusky River after the 1783 Treaty of Paris.[15]

Wyandot (or Huron)

Shawnee

Lenape ( Delaware)

exonym

Miami

(Potawatomi, Odawa, and Ojibwe): their southern families were involved with the Confederacy, but northern and western villages were occupied at the time with a war with the Sioux.[33]

Council of Three Fires

The Wabash Confederacy (, Piankashaw, and others) allied with the Northwestern Confederacy, until it signed a 1792 treaty with the United States.[34]

Wea

The composition of the confederacy changed with time and circumstances, and a number of tribes were involved. Because most nations were not centralized political units at the time, involvement in the confederacy could be decided by a village (or an individual) rather than a nation.


The signatories of the 1786 Detroit letter to Congress were the Iroquois (the "Six Nations"), Cherokee, Huron, Shawnee, Delaware, Odawa, Potawatomi, Twitchee, and the Wabash Confederacy. Joseph Brant signed the letter as an individual.[26] Due to their residence in (or near) the Ohio Country, the confederacy mainly comprised the following tribes:[26]


The Northwestern Confederacy also received support from more-distant nations, including:


The confederacy was periodically supported by communities and warriors from west of the Mississippi River and south of the Ohio River, including the Dakota, Chickamauga Cherokee and Upper Creek.


By 1790 the Northwestern Confederacy was broadly divided into three large divisions. The Iroquois formed a moderate camp who advocated diplomacy with the United States. The Three Fires advocated resistance, but were farther removed from the immediate threat of U.S. invasion. The Miami, Shawnee, and Kickapoo were immediately threatened by U.S. settlements, and pushed for a hard line against U.S. encroachments.[35]

End of the confederacy[edit]

The following year, the Northwestern Confederacy negotiated the Treaty of Greenville with the United States. Utilizing St. Clair's defeat and Fort Recovery as a reference point,[55] the treaty forced the northwest Native American tribes to cede southern and eastern Ohio and tracts of land around forts and settlements in Illinois Country; to recognize the United States as the ruling power in the Old Northwest, and to surrender ten chiefs as hostages until all American prisoners were returned. The Northwestern Confederacy ceased to function as an entity, and many of its leaders pledged peace with the United States. A new pan-Indian movement, led by Tecumseh, formed a decade later. According to historian William Hogeland, the Northwestern Confederacy was the "high-water mark in resistance to white expansion."[56]

Cherokee–American wars

Indian barrier state

Indian Reserve (1763)

Western theater of the American Revolutionary War

Allen, Robert S (1992). His Majesty's Indian Allies: British Indian Policy in the Defense of Canada. Toronto: Dundurn.  1-55002-184-2.

ISBN

Calloway, Colin Gordon (2015). The Victory with No Name: the Native American Defeat of the First American Army. Oxford: Oxford University Press.  978-01993-8799-1.

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Calloway, Colin Gordon (2018). The Indian World of George Washington. New York: Oxford University Press.  9780190652166. LCCN 2017028686.

ISBN

Dowd, Gregory Evans (1992). A Spirited Resistance: The North American Indian Struggle for Unity, 1745–1815. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.  0-8018-4609-9.

ISBN

Hogeland, William (2017). Autumn of the Black Snake. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.  9780374107345. LCCN 2016052193.

ISBN

McDonnell, Michael A (2015). Master of Empire. Great Lakes Indians and the Making of America. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.  978-0374714185.

ISBN

Sugden, John (2000), , Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 0-8032-4288-3

Blue Jacket: Warrior of the Shawnees

Sword, Wiley (1985). President Washington's Indian War: The Struggle for the Old Northwest, 1790-1795. Norman and London: University of Oklahoma Press.  0-8061-1864-4.

ISBN

Tanner, Helen Hornbeck, ed. (1987). . Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-2056-8.

Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History

Tanner, Helen Hornbeck (Winter 1978). "The Glaize in 1792: A Composite Indian Community". Ethnohistory. 25 (1): 15–39. :10.2307/481163. JSTOR 481163.

doi

Van Every, Dale (2008) [1963]. Ark of Empire: The American Frontier: 1784-1803 (The Frontier People of America) (Kindle ed.). New York: Morrow – via Endeavour Media.